Revision of the Hawaiian endemic leaf-mining moth genus Philodoria Walsingham (Lepidoptera: Gracillariidae): its conservation status, host plants and descriptions of thirteen new species
Author
Kobayashi, Shigeki
0000-0002-1336-4730
crossroad1994@hotmail.co.jp
Author
Johns, Chris A.
0000-0002-1749-3847
Author
Kawahara, Akito Y.
0000-0002-1749-3847
text
Zootaxa
2021
2021-03-17
4944
1
1
175
journal article
7393
10.11646/zootaxa.4944.1.1
8adfa0f6-06a7-44b5-a3be-351d0bdc7a62
1175-5326
4681813
380D2F75-D4F9-4974-97E2-25E0C62CB3B0
Philodoria lama
Kobayashi, Johns & Kawahara
,
sp. n.
Figs. 9C
,
41L
,
42K
,
43K
,
56L
,
73E, F
,
83
.
Philodoria
sp. 9;
Johns
et al
. 2018
: fig. 2.
Type
locality.
Kanepuu (Lanai).
Etymology.
The specific epithet,
lama
(pronounced 'La-mah') is a noun in apposition taken from the Hawaiian name of the host plant,
Diospyros
.
Type material.
Holotype
♂,
Kanepuu
,
Lanai
,
24.viii.2014
(stored),
K. Bustamente
leg., host:
Diospyros sandwicensis
,
5.viii. 2014
, CJ382, SK744♂ in
BPBM
.
Paratype
4 (3♂,
1♀
), All types were preserved in
BPBM
. 3♂,
1♀
, Lualailua, Maui,
24.v.2016
(stored),
K. Bustamente
leg., host:
D. sandwicensis
, Spring. 2016
, CJ540, SK
813♀
, SK814
♂.
The
holotype
was mounted by placing four wings without mountant under a coverslip (2/3 of two forewings and apical half of two hindwings); four
paratypes
: a female specimen mounted as a dry pinned specimen with the nearly entire right forewing without mountant under a coverslip; CJ540 / SK813); two male specimens mounted as dry pinned specimens with its near complete forewing without mountant under a coverslip; a male specimen mounted by placing two forewings without mountant under a coverslip (two near complete forewings slightly damaged at base; CJ540 / SK814).
The
head, antenna, thorax, and legs for all specimens were sacrificed for molecular analysis
.
FIGURE 23.
Adults of
Philodoria
species.
A
P. marginestrigata
(
Walsingham, 1907
)
paralectotype male (BPBM 34197),
B
P. marginestrigata
(
Walsingham, 1907
)
Lectotype female, left wings,
C
Same specimen, right wings,
D
P. lipochaetaella
(
Swezey, 1940
)
paralectotype male, one of four cotypes on the same mount (upper left specimen on mount),
E
Lectotype male (upper right specimen on mount),
F
Paralectotype female (lower left specimen on mount),
G
Paralectotype (sex unknown, lower right specimen on mount). Scale bar 1 mm.
Additional material.
1♂,
Lualailua
,
Maui
,
30.xii.2013
(stored),
C.A. Johns
leg., host:
D. sandwicensis
,
24.xii.2013
, CJ161, PHIL0037♂ (abdomen only) in
BPBM
.
FIGURE 24.
Adults of
Philodoria
species.
A
P. lipochaetaella
,
specimens originally described as
Parectopa lipochaetae
Swezey, 1946
, syntype male
B
P. sciallactis
(
Meyrick, 1928
)
lectotype male
C
Paralectotype male
D
Paralectotype female
E
Male left forewing of specimen CJ164, host:
Melanthera kamolensis
, Maui
F
Same specimen, right forewing
G
Male right forewing of specimen CJ189, host:
Melanthera kamolensis
, Maui
H
Philodoria
sp. B nr.
P. sciallactis
(specimen CJ483, sex unknown) right forewing, host:
Lipochaeta acris
, Kauai. Scale
bar 1 mm.
Diagnosis.
The forewing pattern, genital structure and larval habit are very similar to those of
P. splendida
Walsingham
and
P. basalis
Walsingham
, but are distinguished from them because of the basal oblique fascia of the forewing, slender saccus and longer coecum in male genitalia, and coecum which is about 1/4 length of phallus in
P. lama
, but about 1/6~1/5 length in
P. splendida
(
Figs. 9C
,
42I
,
43I
,
73E, F
).
Description: Adult
(
Figs. 9C
,
73E, F
). Forewing length 3.4,
3.5 mm
in two
paratypes
. Head and frons brown; maxillary palpus reduced; labial palpus ocherous to brown with dark brown scales at apex. Antenna grayish fuscous, about
4.2 mm
long in
paratype
. Thorax gray. Forewing dark shiny, pale leaden gray with brownish ocherous patches enclosing gray fascia:
bp
sometimes absent in Lanai specimens, from base along to dorsum 1/4, sometimes from near base of costal fold to near dorsum 1/
4 in
Maui specimens;
tf
from costal 1/3 to dorsal 1/2,
tp
after the middle to apical portion, distinctly narrowing in the dorsum, extending to dorsal 2/3, containing two short, shiny, steel gray costal spots; apical portion with black
as
and a large jet-black terminal patch from tornus to apex, containing two upright steel-gray spots near its opposite extremities; a single bright white spot in its middle; a very narrow ocherous line along the base of tornus; cilia shining, leaden gray with a blackish fringe line; two white costal streaks, long one extend apex; terminal cilia often blackish. Hindwing coppery brown; cilia tawny. Abdomen tawny brown, white below. Legs grayish fuscous, with white spots on the tarsal joints; spurs white with fuscous scales.
Male genitalia
(
Figs. 41L
,
42K
,
43K
) (n=3). Capsule
810 µm
. Tegumen slightly shorter than length of valva; valva
460 µm
long, similar to
P. splendida
except minute spines on dorsal process covered from apically to basally and on inner margin (
Fig. 41L
). Phallus
560 µm
long (
Fig. 43K
).
Female genitalia
(
Fig. 56L
) (n=1).
1240 µm
long. Lamella antevaginalis
160 µm
in length. Corpus bursae
770 µm
long. Similar to
P. basalis
and
P. splendida
.
Distribution.
Oahu, Lanai, and Maui.
Host plants.
Ebenaceae
:
Diospyros sandwicensis
(A.DC.) Fosberg
and/or
D. hillebrandii
(A.DC.) Fosberg. We
could not separate the two
Diospyros
species,
D. sandwicensis
and the closely related
D. hillebrandii
.
Biology.
(
Fig. 83
). Biology unknown, but it is presumably similar to that of
P. basalis
and
P. splendida
. Larvae form an elongate blotch mine on the adaxial leaf surface (
Fig. 83A–C
). One mine per leaf (
Fig. 83A
). Most of the “Taco” cocoons were still attached to the leaf and leaves with cocoons were both on ground and on tree, based on observations at Lualailua, Maui.
Remarks.
We have observed
Philodoria
leaf mines on
Diospyros
on Oahu, but we were unable to find any mines with larvae in them (
Fig. 83D
).
Swezey (1910a)
described the
Diospyros
leaf-miner,
Gracilaria
[sic] (=
Caloptilia
)
mabaella
from Oahu and did not mention the unnamed
Philodoria
leaf miner on
Diospyros
.
Zimmerman (1978a)
noted that
Caloptilia mabaella
might be an introduced species from
Japan
or North America. We observed the
P. lama
and
Caloptilia mabaella
(CJ333) (
Fig. 73D
), occurring sympatrically at Kanepuu, Lanai. The mine of
Caloptilia
is distinguished from that of
P. lama
by the brown in coloration and oval cocoon which is situated at the end of the mine.